Messrs. 90 00 J. H. Gardner Shoe Co.-Shoes.. Colorado Springs Electric Co.-Lights for C. A. Hibbard & Co.-Carpet and linoleum Turner Art Shop-Framing pictures... 538 02 36 35 5 90 247 45 84.96 79 61 242 04 John Jones-Shoeing horses.. 5 00 Carrick Harness and Carriage Co.Brushes 3 15 9, Colorado Hide Co.-Sale of grease... 19. J. W. Hays-Current expenses. 19. Lawrence Lyon, deceased.. 5 70 500 00 10 50 Colorado Springs Laundry Co.-April Charles Deacon-Yeast, $8.70; knife and cake turners, $1; key checks, $2.25; carpenter work, $15.25; expressage on electrical supplies, 75c; freight on insect exterminator, $3.59; general repairs, $20; pension to inmates, $307; transportation, Messrs. Skinner, Curts, Mears, Ayres. May, McDonald and Satterlee, $288.50; telegrams, $1.50; stamped envelops, $21.24; stamps, $5; photographs, $1.50; carriage hire, $1.50; car tickets, $6.75; want ads, 50c; express on billiard supplies, 40c; balance April salaries employes, $62.09; cleaning carpets, $4.80.. Library Addition-Excavating for foundation 21. George Howard-Assistant gardener.. 23. Transportation M. J. Skinner.. 27 00 46 60 24. Transportation Louis Curts.. 24. I. T. U. pensions.. 35 00 76 50 Domestic. 18 33 32 55 5 70 3 59 675 Want ads.. 50 40 75 The keen wit of an Irish printer from Kentucky confined at the Marion county workhouse gained for him the admiration of Mayor Bookwalter and incidentally his release from that institution. The printer went to the workhouse in an automobile patrol wagon, but he left it in an automobile touring car with the mayor as a fellow passenger. was It will be remembered that the mayor formerly a printer and that he still carries a card. Hence printers in trouble give him the high sign of distress and profit thereby. The "high sign" from the man in the workhouse did not go to the mayor direct, but through a mutual "print" friend. The letter that led to the printer's release was written to a fellow-printer, who in turn gave it to the mayor, and was dated at the workhouse. "For the love of heaven, send or bring me some plug tobacco," wrote the printer, "and some stamped envelops. I have a little money, but want to save it to get away with when my 110 days. are up at this Hotel d'Industrie. Must have accumulated an elegant stand of refreshments after I left you, as after a twenty-four hour nap at the police station I awakened to a charge of pulling a gun on a man. "I remember the gun all right, but nothing at all about the mixup. Don't say anything to the boys, as I don't care to be 'kidded' the rest of my life, I have adapted myself to circumstances and have already learned to walk like a duck and eat like that barnyard quadruped which 'divideth the hoof, but cheweth not the cud.' Am now a fullfledged member of the Rock Pickers' Bangfest. "If you come out, come direct to the building; don't go around by the police station and come in the wagon-that's the way I got in bad. "This is my first experience in this line and I must say it is not exactly the sort of recreation I would have chosen for my declining years. Also, I don't like to stay in my apartment quite so close. The life here is very simple; get up at 6 A. M. and go to bed at 6 P. M. Meals are served en famille in a large salle a' manger with attentive young men, armed with clubs, stationed about to see that none of the guests is dissatisfied. We are allowed to write twice a month and to receive reproachful friends on the first Wednesday in each month. "Well, I'm here and going to make the best of it, but when I get out Indiana will be a mere speck on the horizon in about two blinks. If you have any magazines of a vintage later than 1492, they would be like manna in the desert. Thanking you for past favors and heaping blessings on your head for those I am hereby trying to work you for, I am, yours, Terry." The mayor inclosed the letter with a note to Judge Whallon, saying that he was satisfied that a man with so much humor in his makeup as the printer seemed to have, was incapable, when in his right mind, of harboring designs against the life of any one. The judge's answer came back in the way of a release written on the back of the envelop. The mayor called an automobile and hurried to the workhouse. There he found the printer placing dishes on the table in the dining-room. "Hello," said the mayor, in surprise; "I thought you said you were on the rock pile.' "There has been a promotion in the office," returned the "print," "I'm on the make-up now." Then the mayor brought the printer to town in an automobile and in a little more than "two blinks" that worthy was on a train, bound for his old Kentucky home, where "guns" may be carried with impunity. THE POWER OF A SMALL ACT. Recently several trade union matters of only local importance in the first instance have taken on a national aspect because of the development and exploitation by the press of the country of what were primarily trivial incidents in connection with the real question at stake. This has not tended to give people a true impression of trade unionism. All reformers make mistakes; as a class they are not more infallible than other people. And it is usually their mistakes that are at first given the most prominence. Just so is it with organizations existing for the benefit and welfare of the many. They will always be judged in certain quarters not so much by the permanent good they accomplish, but by the selfishly aggressive acts of a few of their members. Acts, like people, are frequently judged by appearances. Each man must interpret the deeds of another as they appear to him. And his judgment is according to his own powers of perception and his own depth and breadth of character. A littleminded man will, of course, be quick to impute a small, contemptible motive to an act with which he happens not to be in sympathy, either for material reasons or on account of prejudice-regardless of the underlying principles governing it. But there are many otherwise fair-minded men who misjudge a fine character because of some trivial act. It is well worth remembering that one must not only be good, but one must appear to be good. One must not only have high principles; one must show them in every act, otherwise people will not believe that they are there. I know a very successful business man-a man who has made a large fortune for himself, and an enviable position as an authority on finance. Every man in his line of business respects his knowledge and ability. Yet I have never heard one kind word spoken of him in the business world. In his home he is the most unselfish of men; a Christian father in the truest sense of the term. He does a great deal of good, too, in a quiet and unostentatious way. But the minute he enters his office he becomes-to all appearances a hard, cold, calculating financier, to whom human beings are only interesting in direct ratio to their business value. And in this character he does a great deal of harm, in a negative way. and It is a curious fact that most of us would show more charity, more unselfishness and more love for our fellow beings if we weren't ashamed to. It is the fear of being thought "sentimental" "goody-good" that makes us paint ourselves blacker than we are. Very few of us have the courage of our convictions. We always wait for the other fellow to take the lead. And frequently he leads the wrong way. Yet he gathers in his followers-many against their better judgment-simply through the force of will power, which is the hypnotic force that rules weak characters. This is one of the difficult problems that organized labor has constantly to meet. People are gradually beginning to learn something about its aims and the actual good it has done, yet as long as individuals are not actuated by the principles which they uphold as an organized body, trade unions are going to be misjudged. There will always be some who will judge them by the reckless acts of a few men. It is well, then, for each and every man who stands for organized labor to let its high principles govern all his acts, that he may not, even in the smallest way, misrepresent a great power for good. -Rev. Charles Stelzle. Official Directory INTERNATIONAL TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION. Headquarters-Rooms 640-650 Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. Long Distance Telephone-President, Main 2885; secretary, Main 2886. GENERAL OFFICERS. President-James M. Lynch, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. First Vice-President-George A. Tracy, room 123, 787 Market street, San Francisco, Cal. Second Vice-President-Hugo Miller, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. Third Vice-President-Charles N. Smith, 1947 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Secretary-Treasurer-J. W. Hays, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. TRUSTEES UNION PRINTERS HOME. President-James M. Lynch, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. Vice-President-Thomas McCaffery, II West Boulder street, Colorado Springs, Colo. Secretary-Treasurer-J. W. Hays, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. L. C. Shepard, 209 Terrace avenue, Grand Rapids, Mich. W. J. White, 4053 Twenty-third street, San Francisco, Cal. Thomas F. Crowley, 12 Hulbert block, Cincinnati, Ohio. T. D. Fennessy, 508 Union Trust building, Los Angeles, Cal. Agent-George P. Nichols, 535 North Carrollton avenue, Baltimore, Md. DELEGATES TO FEDERATION OF LABOR. James M. Lynch, Newton Claypool building, Indianapolis, Ind. Frank Morrison, 801-809 G street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Max S. Hayes, 979 Parkwood drive, Cleveland, Ohio. Hugh Stevenson, 176 McPherson avenue, Toronto, Ont. T. W. McCullough, 2028 Maple st., Omaha, Neb. Baker, John, box 400, Helena, Mont. Dodge, Frank H., Reaves bldg., Little Rock, Ark. Fisher, K. S., box 794, Omaha, Neb. Haight, Wm. S., 55 Eleventh st., Detroit, Mich. Hill, Albert E., 335% Third avenue, north, Kinskey, C. E., 6 Chapin block, Buffalo, N. Y. McLernon, W. E., 508 Union Trust building, Los Angeles, Cal. McLoughlin. J. E., 70-74 Lafayette st.. New York city, or 1271 Bushwick ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Maloney, R. S., 31 Bennington street, Lawrence, Mass. Mitchell, George E., 478 Twelfth avenue, San Francisco, Cal. Nelson, C. W., 89% Gottingen street, Halifax, N. S., Can. Parsons, T. C., 210 P street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Pettipiece, R. P., 421 Eleventh avenue, East, Vancouver, B. C. Rodriguez, Armand B., Hotel Alcazar, 121 Prado, Havana, Cuba. Rust, F. A., care Labor Temple, Seattle, Wash. Thompson, Clifford, box 504, Charleston, S. C. Woodman, C. W., box 437, Fort Worth, Texas. TRADE DISTRICT UNIONS. Mailers' Trade District Ur ion-Secretary, Robert T. Allen, box 1817, Boston, Mass. SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATION. International Commission on Supplemental Education-A. H. McQuilkin, Chicago, Ill.; William B. Prescott, Chicago, Ill.; Robert E. Darnaby, Indianapolis, Ind. ALLIED PRINTING TRADES COUNCILS. LIST OF SECRETARIES. Akron, Ohio-George Harding, 528 E. Buchtel av. Atlanta, Ga.-E. L. Parham, 121⁄2 North Broad. Bellingham, Wash.-E. Hofercamp, 1118 Forest. Brockton, Mass.-W. W. Adams, 47 W. Rosseter. Cincinnati, Ohio-R. H. Curl, 17 Fisher block. Decatur, Ill.-F. W. Ritter, 305 South Peake st. street. Duluth, Minn.-E. T. Hughes, care News-Tribune. Elgin, Ill. John W. Cape, care Courier. Enid, Okla.-H. A. Breitenstein, 503 Chamber of Erie, Pa.-Geo. A. Cook, 238 West Twenty-third st. Grand Rapids, Mich.-C. B. Waddell, 36 South Division street. Hartford, Conn.-George W. Saunders, box 856. Helena, Mont.-Charles J. Tipton, box 133. Houston, Texas-H. T. Tyner, 3104 Milan. Indianapolis, Ind.-G. E. Haines, 646 Newton Claypool building. Jackson, Mich.-J. C. Welch, 512 W. Wilkins st. Jackson, Miss.-B. W. Waide, care Tucker Printing Company. Jacksonville, Fla.-A. W. Grooms, 32 East Forsyth, Flat 5. Jamestown, N. Y.-J. B. Leach, 16 East Fourth st. Lincoln, Neb.-J. H. Brooks, 728 N. Eleventh st. son street. Lowell, Mass.-Edw. Turnbull, 27 Menthuen st. avenue. Meriden, Conn.-T. E. Lawler, 127 Liberty. Milwaukee, Wis.-Richard Vogt, 748 Eleventh st. Minneapolis, Minn.-G. W. Willy, 2815 Clinton av. Mobile, Ala.-J. C. White, 57 South Ann street. Muncie, Ind.-Joseph Herdering, 916 S. Elm st. Muskogee, Okla.-L. C. Butler, care Democrat. Nashville, Tenn.-Lytton Alley, 1706 Underwood st. New Haven, Conn.-A. Lubinsky, 619 Congress av. Newark, N. J.-Frank J. Ostertag, 377 Bergen. New Orleans, La.-Robert J. Ames, 1677 N. Claiborne avenue. New York, N. Y.-Morton B. Connelly, 310 Pulitzer building. Niagara Falls, N. Y.-P. J. McCarthy, 810 Willow avenue. Norfolk, Va.-E. W. Gaines, Virginia Unionist. Pensacola, Fla.-R. E. L. Cresap, box 395. avenue. Rochester, N. Y.-Alex. Baird, 72 Cady street. Sacramento, Cal.-W. J. Shroads, care Morning Union. Salt Lake, Utah-Jos. T. Watts, 274 A street. San Diego, Cal.-Robert Coats, 966 Tenth street. Seattle, Wash.-R. M. McCullough, care Labor Shreveport, La.-C. A. Cox, care Williams Printing Company. Sioux City, Iowa-A. Uline. 506 S. Iowa street. Sioux Falls, S. D.-H. Patterson, care Journal. Spartanburg, S. C.-J. L. Sauls, care Herald. Spokane, Wash.-Max Demuth, 213 Howard st. Springfield, Ill.-Bert Winter, care Journal Printing Company. Springfield, Mass.-W. W. Barker, care Central Labor Union. Springfield, Mo.-George A. Bauman, 827 N. Grant street. Springfield, Ohio-John V. Smeltzer, 530 Linden avenue. St. Augustine, Fla.-Tom McHan, drawer A. St. Paul, Minn.-J. E. Corcoran, 404-406 Court block. Stockton, Cal.-W. E. Court, 1430 South Center st. over street. Tulsa, Okla.-Charles Putnam, care World. Walla Walla, Wash.-C. W. Gillingham, box 297. Washington, D. C.-Elmer Johnson, 2009 Flagler street, N. W. Waterbury, Conn.-L. H. Baker, 48 Center st. Watertown, N. Y.-C. M. Burnett, care Reunion. Wheeling, W. Va.-E. M. Pierce, 66 Fifteenth st. Winnipeg, Man., Can.-Thomas S. Ezart, box 770. Worcester, Mass.-P. H. Beahn, 7 Preston. Youngstown, Ohio-Benjamin Evans, 108 Market. SUBORDINATE UNIONS. LIST OF SECRETARIES, ETC. Notice of change or error in the following list should be promptly forwarded to the secretary-treas urer of the International Typographical Union: ALABAMA. Anniston No. 419-R. E. Gann, 822 Quintard ave. Birmingham No. 104-W. M. Peterson, box 868. Mobile No. 27-John J. Russell, 28 South Ann. Montgomery No. 222-J. B. Walker, care Journal. ALASKA. Fairbanks No. 639-Charles A. Newton, care News. Nome No. 582-F. G. Kappelman, box 361. ARIZONA. Douglas No. 544-Milford Pharr, 925 Sixteenth st. ARKANSAS. Fort Smith No. 249-Roger R. Barrett, box 72. Hot Springs No. 574-G. P. Bumpass, 416 Rector avenue. Little Rock No. 92-Elmer Grant, box 258. street. CALIFORNIA. Bakersfield No. 439-H. E. Harris, 2011 Orange st. Chico No. 667-C. A. Reed, R. F. D. No. 2. Eureka No. 207-Edward B. Kain, 2235 J street. Fresno No. 144-W. P. Faddis, box 128. Long Beach and San Pedro No. 650-N. S. Cosby, box 542. Long Beach, Cal. Los Angeles No. 174-G. W. Bowman, 203 Union crat. Oakland No. 36-D. L. Beatty, 1055 Broadway. Palo Alto No. 521-Frank Kasson, 524 Emerson st. Riverside No. 254-Phil V. Dewey, 879 Walnut st. San Francisco No. 21-L. Michelson, room 123, 787 Market street. San Jose No. 231-J. W. Bowman, 685 S. Ninth. Santa Rosa No. 577-W. S. Linsley, 726 Orchard. CANADA. Brantford, Ont., No. 378-E. R. Sayles, 126 Chatham. Calgary, Alberta, N. W. T., No. 449-S. Burnand, box 1388. Cranbrook, B. C., No. 540-L. P. Sullivan, box 228. Edmonton, Alberta, N. W. T., No. 604-A. J. Healey, drawer 1861. Fernie, B. C., No. 555-A. J. Buckley. Fort William, Ont., No. 417-George R. Wallace, box 396. Fredericton, N. B., No. 664-F. Emms. Guelph, Ont., No. 391-C. P. Doughty, box 574. Jacques-Cartier No. 145-Victor Tardif, 187-B Ste. Elizabeth, Montreal, P. Q. Kingston, Ont., No. 204-S. Salsbury, Barrifield P. O., Ontario, Can. Lethbridge, Alberta, N. W. T., No. 551-J. Jones, box 507. London, Ont., No. 133-Financial secretary, Fred Chambers, cor. High and Chester streets. South London; corresponding secretary, William O. Ruse, 14 Walnut street. Moncton, N. B., No. 636-J. H. Lang, 3 Park st. Montreal, Que., No. 176--Ovila Grandmaison, 68 St. Edward, St. Denis ward. Montreal, Que., No. 607 (Hebrew)-Solly Krems, 611 St. Lawrence boulevard. Moose Jaw, Sask., N. W. T., No. 627-George Paterson, care Times. Nelson, B. C., No. 340-G. W. Priest, box 484. New Westminster, B. C., No. 632-R. A. Stoney, box 965. Ottawa, Ont., No. 102-W. C. Metzger, box 491. Peterborough, Ont., No. 248-J. M. Galbraith, 125 Brock street. Port Arthur, Ont., No. 575-Hugh Flaherty, box 464. Quebec, P. Q., No. 302-President, Charles E. Rousseau, 95 St. Paul street; vice-president. Jos. Coleman; corresponding secretary, M. J. Crane, 424 Champlain; recording secretary, William Garns; secretary, Alf. Larose, 337 Arago street; treasurer, Ed Little, box 193. Regina, Sask., No. 657-W. B. Stevens, 1722 Os ler street. Rossland, B. C., No. 335-John Wilson, box 335. Saskatoon, Sask.. No. 663-F. S. Gordon, box 571. Stratford, Ont., No. 139-Roy Dunbar, 195 Brunswick street. St. Catharines, Ont., No. 416-Bert Gadsby, 16 Havnes ave. St. John, N. B., No. 85-Frank W. Stanton, 20 High street. St. Thomas, Ont., No. 459-Le Roy Leach, care The Times Press. Toronto, Ont., No. 91-President, Samuel Hadden; vice-president. A. E. Thompson; corresponding secretary, William R. Steep: financial secretary, T. C. Vodden; treasurer, Ed J. How. Ad dress box 211, or room 6, 57 King street, west. Union meets first Saturday in month. Vancouver, B. C., No. 226-President, A. C. Benson, 2002 Second ave., west; vice-president, A. E. Robb; financial secretary, R. H. Neelands, box 66. Union meets last Sunday in every month. Vernon, B. C., No. 541-B. R. Campbell, box 414. Victoria, B. C., No. 201-G. M. Watt, box 209. Windsor, Ont., No. 553-George Marentette, 98 Albert st. Winnipeg, Man., No. 191-J. C. Bleaken, box 2024. COLORADO. Canon City No. 425-George Miles, box 455. Colorado Springs No. 82-President, Harry A. Scholton; financial and corresponding secretary, J. T. Reames, box 813. Cripple Creek No. 227-J. R. Thompson, care Times. Denver No. 49-President, E. S. Close; Vicepresident, George Allen; financial secretary, F. C. Birdsall, box 681. Durango No. 373-W. A. Navinger, box 461. Greeley No. 586-C. M. Becker, 1227 Ninth ave. CONNECTICUT. Bridgeport No. 252-P. W. Pulver, 173 Orchard st. Hartford No. 127-S. T. Pfund, box 856. |